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Learning Chinese characters may improve visual recall.

M Sugishita1, K Omura

  • 1Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Japan. sugi@m.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Perceptual and Motor Skills
|January 25, 2002
PubMed
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Japanese individuals exhibit superior visual memory recall, potentially due to early training in memorizing Chinese characters. This visual memory advantage persisted across age groups, suggesting a link between character learning and cognitive skills.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Cross-cultural Psychology

Background:

  • Learning to read and write involves memorizing thousands of complex visual forms, such as Chinese characters.
  • Early and extensive training in visual form memorization may influence cognitive development and memory capabilities.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the correlation between learning Chinese characters and specific memory functions.
  • To compare visual memory performance between Japanese and U.S. populations.

Main Methods:

  • Administered the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R) to a Japanese sample (n=316).
  • Compared visual recall subtest scores (Visual Reproduction I and II) with existing data from a U.S. sample (n=316).
  • Analyzed performance across six age groups (16-74 years).

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Main Results:

  • Japanese participants consistently outperformed U.S. participants on visual recall tasks across all age groups.
  • The decline in visual recall performance with age was less pronounced in the Japanese group.
  • Japanese individuals also showed higher scores on the Visual Memory Span subtest in several age groups.

Conclusions:

  • Early and sustained training in memorizing complex visual forms, like Chinese characters, may enhance general visual memory abilities.
  • Cultural factors, specifically the demands of learning logographic writing systems, appear to shape specific cognitive functions, including visual memory.
  • The findings suggest that intensive visual learning can lead to more robust and age-resistant visual memory.